Feds Win Right to Sell Spirikaitis Home

Authorities now have permission to sell the million-dollar home of Alex Spirikaitis, the former CEO of the now-shuttered $23.6 million Taupa Lithuanian Credit Union in Cleveland.

U.S District Judge John R. Adams in Akron, Ohio, approved a final forfeiture order Nov. 18 that allows the federal government to sell the property in suburban Solon, Ohio.

“It appears to the court that proper proceedings for the issuance of a final order of forfeiture have been had in this case,” Adams wrote in the order.

Proceeds from the sale of the home will be distributed to NCUA, according to court documents. The federal agency closed Taupa Lithuanian CU in July ­after declaring it was no longer solvent.

Funds from the sale of the home will also pay a $30,514 bill owed to a local contractor who landscaped the home. The U.S. government also would be reimbursed for costs related to the seizure of the property, court documents said.

In September, federal prosecutors seized the home, which features an indoor pool, entertainment room, a weight room, an elevator, a handicap track system, five and one-half bathrooms, and a fully equipped upstairs and downstairs kitchen.

Federal authorities suspect the house was built with funds embezzled from the credit union as Spirikaitis was earning only $50,000 annually, according to court papers.

Spirikaitis had been a fugitive since July until he was nabbed by federal agents while walking on a sidewalk on Cleveland’s east side on Oct. 21. He has been charged with making false statements about the credit union’s finances and is in federal custody.